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To: Brumar89 who wrote (355687)3/25/2010 10:47:49 PM
From: KLP  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793838
 
The Left POV on TeaPartiers: Tea Partyers' Political Anger Isn't Harmless

By EUGENE ROBINSON
Posted 06:11 PM ET


Let's not pretend anymore that the Tea Party movement is harmless. The right to protest is one of our cherished American freedoms.

But there is no right to vandalism, no right to threaten our elected officials' lives. Someone is going to get hurt unless those who lead the movement — and those who exploit it — start acting like responsible adults.
What are the chances of that?

It was Sarah Palin, the Eva Peron of the Tea Party crowd, who used Facebook to target 20 Democrats who voted for health care reform, indicating their districts' locations on a map with the cross hairs of a rifle scope. It was Palin who wrote on Twitter: "Commonsense Conservatives & lovers of America: 'Don't Retreat, Instead — RELOAD!' Pls see my Facebook page."

That anyone still listens to this person is one of the most unfortunate unintended consequences of social networking.
At least 10 House Democrats have had to request additional security following Sunday's health care vote. Someone left a coffin on the lawn of Rep. Russ Carnahan's home in Missouri.

Glass doors and windows were broken at the district offices of Reps. Louise Slaughter of New York and Gabrielle Giffords of Arizona. Vandals have damaged Democratic Party offices in Wichita Kan., Rochester, N.Y., and Cincinnati.

And Rep. Bart Stupak of Michigan, whose last-minute compromise on abortion funding guaranteed final passage of the reform act, has received a flood of abusive phone calls at his office and home. Someone faxed him a drawing of a noose.

One voice mail, subsequently posted on the Internet, was left by a woman who wanted Stupak to know that "there are millions of people across the country who wish you ill."

Another caller was more direct: "You're dead. We know where you live. We'll get you."

One would expect responsible Republican leaders to do everything in their power to lower the temperature.
House Minority Leader John Boehner said on Fox News that "violence and threats are unacceptable."

Minority Whip Eric Cantor disclosed that he has received numerous threats in the past and that a bullet was fired through the window of his Richmond campaign office last week.
Given all this, one would think these two might have intervened Sunday when fellow House Republicans were whipping up the angry Tea Party crowd at the Capitol.

Some of the vandalism appears to have been inspired by an Alabama blogger, Mike Vanderboegh, who trumpeted the bright idea that opponents of health care reform should throw bricks at Democratic headquarters across the country.

After someone did just that in Rochester, a reporter from the Democrat and Chronicle called Vanderboegh for comment. "I guess that guy's one of ours," Vanderboegh said. "Glad to know people read my blog."

If authorities tried to file any charges against him, Vanderboegh said, a trial "would certainly give me an opportunity to make my case to a larger public."

The nature of his "case" may be illuminated by a short story, titled "Absolved," that he published on a right-wing Web site.
His fictional protagonist fights to the death against unnamed, uniform-wearing "thugs" — apparently police — who have come to his house to confiscate his huge arsenal of guns and explosives.

On Thursday, Tea Party leaders around the country issued statements strongly denouncing threats or violence against members of Congress or anyone else. A number of the leaders said there was no proof that the perpetrators were members of Tea Party organizations.

But this strikes me, and probably will strike others, as disingenuous.

The Tea Party movement is fueled by rhetoric that echoes the paranoid ravings of the most extreme right-wing nut cases.
When Tea Party leaders talk about the threat of "socialism" and call for "a new revolution" and vow to "take our country back," they can say they are simply using vivid metaphors.
But they cannot plausibly claim to be unaware that there are people — perhaps on the fringe of the movement, but close enough — who give every sign of taking these incendiary words literally.

And does anyone doubt that the movement attracts the kind of people who take these words literally?

Organizations such as the Anti-Defamation League and the Southern Poverty Law Center have documented the troubling rise of right-wing militia and "patriot" groups.

Political leaders who appropriate and reinforce the extremists' language — who urge angry people to "reload" — are being reckless. They must stop this madness before someone gets hurt.
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To: Brumar89 who wrote (355687)3/25/2010 10:49:50 PM
From: KLP1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793838
 
And from the Right: Dissent's Noble — Until Aimed At Democrats

By L. BRENT BOZELL III
Posted 06:14 PM ET



During the Bush years, the news media were the promoters of protest, the champions of dissent. Denouncing the president as a brain-damaged warmonger was the most patriotic thing you could do (just ask the Dixie Chicks), and it was guaranteed to please the press.

On MSNBC before the Iraq War in 2003, David Shuster elevated the "anti-war" movement to the equivalent of the U.S. military, only with a higher morality: "The size of the demonstrators, at least here, at least in Europe, seems to underscore that there are now perhaps two world superpowers," he told Chris Matthews. "There's the United States, and then there are those millions of people who took to the streets opposing U.S. policy."

My, how times, and standards, change.

On the weekend of the vote for a massive government intervention in the health insurance market, these same reporters had a different take. Tea Party protesters weren't going to be hailed for their courageous and patriotic use of their free time. They were going to be smeared for daring to be.

Democrats claimed that racial slurs were used against black politicians on Capitol Hill, and an "anti-gay slur" was allegedly heard around Rep. Barney Frank.

It's understandable that Democrats would want this opposition to their power grab to be reduced to absurdity, a spasm of racism and homophobia instead of organized conservative idealism. It's deplorable that our national "news" media went into overdrive on this Democrat public-relations initiative.

To listen to the press, the Tea Party's presence in Washington was violent, dangerous, uncivil and unprecedented, and their protests threatened to ruin the Republican image — as if that isn't at the top of the liberal media's To-Do list every day.

In the Iraq War protests of 2003, the leftist protesters were on the wrong side of the polls. In the health "reform" protests of 2010, the protesters represented an angry majority. Since Shuster works for MSNBC, in that parallel universe, the majority had become a dangerous and ugly mob.

Shuster asked black conservative Robert Traynham to blame the conservative media for these overheard outbursts (not that any network had them on tape): "Do any conservative media outlets, Robert, bear any responsibility for that? Because when people hear over and over that this is Nazism on the march, or fascism, or that Armageddon is coming, of course some people are going to flip out."

The whole smear turned ridiculous when conservative radio host Mark Simone told Shuster that every protest has some overenthusiastic people yelling stupid things.

Shuster insisted that the left had never behaved in that fashion in the Bush years: "Nobody spit on a lawmaker. Nobody used an N-word. Nobody used an F-word."

Nobody? Ever? Assuming the illogical to be true, so what? I have a line Mr. Shuster will remember well because his network allowed it to be aired countless times: "Bush lied, thousands died."

Maybe not the F-word, but he was accused of being a mass murderer.

Shuster wasn't done with Simone: "But the difference is, Mark, that whenever we asked Democratic leaders, 'Look, do you support using a Hitler moustache on a poster of George W. Bush?' Every single time, they said 'Absolutely not, we do not approve of that. We want, of course, we want people to protest. But not like that.' And you see, it's just like crickets from the Republican side of this stuff, and that's the difference."

This "crickets" claim was even more ridiculous on Shuster's part, since nearly every Republican responded to the question by denouncing the abusive remarks reported.

RNC Chairman Michael Steele and House Minority Leader John Boehner insisted on it on NBC's "Meet the Press," which MSNBC had replayed.

If anything, conservatives and Republicans are failing to respond to the David Shusters by throwing this dead fish right back. Who on Earth is MSNBC to lecture anyone else about hateful rhetoric? The network where several hosts — Ed Schultz and Dylan Ratigan — said Republicans enthusiastically want to see Americans die, even large segments of the American people?

But MSNBC viewers see on-screen graphics like this one: "Crossing the Line: Anti-Reform Protests Take on Malicious Tone."

MSNBC replayed Democratic meanness as almost factual. Even in that "Malicious Tone" segment, Andrea Mitchell calmly relayed Barney Frank's Tea Party analogy, "comparing the situation to the Salem Witch Trials, with health care being burned at the stake." That remark apparently has malice toward none.

Liberal journalists have squandered any credibility they imagine they have as referees of political civility.

They not only fail to decry liberal mudslinging, they do it all on their own.

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